I got to tell two people who didn't know this was coming tomorrow about this tonight. They were just as excited as I was. We talked briefly about THE PEOPLE VS. GEORGE LUCAS, and I would say about this, the difference is that what Red Letter Media is doing is that it's an engineering deconstruction. This isn't about bitching about fanwanking, so far.

You know, due to the anticipation of this review, what are the chances that this might overwhelm the youtube's servers and end up crashing it?
Hope it doesn't happen but you have to admit the possibility is there.

They were just as excited as I was. We talked briefly about THE PEOPLE VS. GEORGE LUCAS, and I would say about this, the difference is that what Red Letter Media is doing is that it's an engineering deconstruction. This isn't about bitching about fanwanking, so far.

That's the impression I got too. It wasn't so much a critique in the regular way as reverse engineering. Taking a faulty product apart piece by piece and pointing out the faults in the design of the components. Which is probably also the reason why these take 70 or 80 minutes instead of 15.

You know, due to the anticipation of this review, what are the chances that this might overwhelm the youtube's servers and end up crashing it?
Hope it doesn't happen but you have to admit the possibility is there.

The first part of the TPM review has 1.6 million views, which is of course a big hit but nowhere near any kind of record and is actually less than I would have guessed. The others have a couple hundred thousand views each.

It's awfully popular for something that is 70 minutes long but I don't think the traffic for the AOTC review will be anything YouTube will even blink at.

I made pizza for it. From scratch! None of this roll shit,(we actually don't get them in Oz) but it's for a youtube presentation so I still feel a bit naff. Got this and new Doctor Who to watch so it's probably the apex of my Nerdness. I'm cool with that, ultimately.

CLONES was one of the best movie-going experiences I've ever had in a theater...probably top 3.

Now, I haven't watched the film from beginning to end in a long, long time. Don't know how well it holds up today. But I'll never forget the burst of excitement and thrills this film gave me when I saw it on opening day.

CLONES was one of the best movie-going experiences I've ever had in a theater...probably top 3.

Now, I haven't watched the film from beginning to end in a long, long time. Don't know how well it holds up today. But I'll never forget the burst of excitement and thrills this film gave me when I saw it on opening day.

Lucas really got the pacing spot on here. It was just a lot of fun.

You should maybe give it another spin. Actually, you might be better off with the memory of that original theater experience.

You should maybe give it another spin. Actually, you might be better off with the memory of that original theater experience.

You're probably right. My connection with Star Wars in general has waned considerably since the release of SITH. As my knowledge and love for film has increased, I just don't find the films (including the OT) to be all that satisfying any more.

Pretty much my feelings. But its enough for me to rank it higher than the other two prequels.

Still, bring on the review.

I haven't seen the prequels in years, but back when they were fresh on my young mind Episode II seemed to me to be the best one (Relatively speaking, of course. They were all disappointing). So it's been vaguely surprising to see it frequently singled out as the worst in recent years. Mind you, it hasn't surprised me enough to make me go back and watch the prequels again, but I think it will make this review extra informative and entertaining for me.

THE STAR WARS HOLIDAY SPECIAL is vastly superior to ATTACK OF THE CLONES. With the former you get coked-up Carrie, animated Boba, holographic porn, rare STAR WARS outtakes and an amusingly bored-out-of-his-mind Harrison Ford as Han Solo. With the latter, you get ass raped by a bull elephant wearing a sandpaper condom.

I can't work up the effort to determine which is less sucky, but I suspect if I watched them again back-to-back (shudder) I'd prefer II. It's true that shit actually happens in III, but it happens in such an embarassingly perfunctory way that there's no charge whatsoever from watching these long-awaited events. It's more or less the prequels in a nutshell: we thought we wanted to see this stuff, but Lucas managed to deliver it in a way that makes it infinitely less cool than if it had been left up to our imaginations.

At the time my take on III was something like, yes in some ways it's better than the other two but there are still so many bad ideas and missed opportunities and in a weird way that stings even more than if it had been flat out horrible. It's like putting an exclamation point on how disappointing the trilogy is as a whole. So it left a more bitter taste in my mouth than either of the other two even if it's objectively better.

I find the only reason I enjoyed Episode I more than the other two is that, despite the plot not making any sense, the structure feels more Star Wars-y. Or rather, it was Star Wars if it was paint-by-number. Hey...space stuff. Look...Tatooine. The characters are going into space...now they're coming back to the planet, just like in A New Hope. Something blew up. Even after watching the TPM review, that hazy feeling still lingers.

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It's like putting an exclamation point on how disappointing the trilogy is as a whole.